Sherlock Holmes: Reading like a Detective an 8th



Download 0.6 Mb.
Page10/14
Date31.01.2017
Size0.6 Mb.
#14368
1   ...   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14

Extension activity: Have students research Sherlock Holmes and his legacy and share their findings with the class in an oral presentation. Some focused research questions might be: What influenced Doyle to create Sherlock Holmes, and what was Doyle’s attitude toward his most famous character? What other famous literary detectives are there, and why is Holmes the most famous? What other works of art (books, plays, movies, TV shows) has the character of Holmes inspired, and how do these works revise and update his character for contemporary readers and viewers? How have different actors portrayed Holmes, and in what ways are their portrayals loyal to and in departure from the character in Doyle’s novel?

Tier II/Academic Vocabulary from chapter fourteen:





These words require less time to learn

(They are concrete, describe an object/event/process/characteristic that is familiar to students, or contain familiar word parts)



These words require more time to learn

(They are abstract, have multiple meanings, are a part of a word family, or are likely to appear again in future texts)



Meaning can be learned from context


Accomplice (163)

Infamy (161)

Incited (163)

Procured (164)

Inclined (164)

Accessory (167)


Meaning needs to be provided

Purloined (160)

Schemer (161)



Upshot (159)

Disrepute (161)

Finesse (161)

Avail (162)

Specious (162)

Audacity (164)



Fidelity (168)

Lesson Sixteen: Hound seminar

Summary: Students will conduct a final seminar on the novel which can serve as a summative assessment for their reading of the novel.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • An understanding of the novel’s key characters, events, ideas, and themes.


Directions for teachers:

  1. Seminar: Students will engage in a final inquiry-based seminar to generate concluding thoughts about the novel. This activity also serves as an assessment of students’ overall reading of the novel. The seminar format can be better for assessing deep understanding than a traditional multiple-choice assessment.

    1. Review the classroom norms for inquiry-based discussions and make any revisions as necessary. Decide on a method for choosing who gets to speak. (Because this is an assessment, the teacher may choose to call on students to ensure a fair distribution; for a mature class that has developed strong norms, the teacher might choose a student facilitator to call on peers. Either way, the teacher should interfere minimally, at most calling on students and moving the discussion along. Try not to add your own comments or provide feedback.) Make sure students are aware of your expectations for their performance and how they will be assessed (see notes on assessment methods below). Because there are no recall/closed-ended questions as in a quiz or test, there is no reason to conceal any information from the students. Rather, students should be encouraged to continuously return to their books, sleuth journals, and notes during the discussion.

    2. Arrange chairs into a circle or fish bowl format.

    3. Conduct the seminar, calling on students to provide their prepared questions one at a time and moving on to new questions once particular lines of inquiry have been exhausted. Try for a brisk pace so that attentions don’t lag and the maximum number of students can participate, but don’t be afraid to dwell extensively on a particular question if it generates rich discussion and multiple viewpoints.

    4. End the seminar when there is about ten minutes left in class and ask students to respond to the following prompt in their sleuth journals:


What new perspective on this novel did you bring to the seminar (or what did you want to say but were not able to?)? What is one new perspective you gained from a classmate during the seminar? What is one point on which you disagree with a classmate, and why? What else would you still like to understand about this novel?


    1. Assessment methods: There are many ways to assess a seminar like this. A few suggestions are:

      • Print a blank class attendance roster and take notes during the seminar, placing a mark in each row next to a student’s name when that student speaks. Create a coding and scoring system to allow you to take quick notes and explain it to students before the seminar starts. For instance: each student must ask at least one question (mark as Q on the roster) and provide at least two answers (mark as A on the roster) to get full credit; one question plus one answer equals partial credit, etc. Other marks could include special contributions, like particularly insightful comments or effective interaction with peers.

      • To ensure all students feel included and have ways to participate according to their strengths, broaden the possible ways to score points. For instance, a student may not think of an answer to a question but may have some new, relevant piece of evidence to bring to the table (which can be an equally important mode of contribution). Other students might lack original ideas but excel at noticing trends and synthesizing other students’ ideas into a new understanding.

      • Collect the final reflection as an exit slip and use it to gauge a student’s mental engagement with the seminar and the book. You can assign a score to the reflection and combine it with your notes on the discussion to create a total grade for the seminar.

      • After writing their final reflection, have students perform a self-assessment. Students are often remarkably honest and accurate when assessing their own work. Ask them to grade their performance in the seminar and explain why they think they deserved that letter grade. Then compare the student’s grade to your own notes. If they differ, consider discussing the grade with the student and coming to a compromise.

  1. Tell students that during the next lesson, they will write an argument paragraph about the book. To prepare, they should again review their notes on the book, as well as their notes and exercises from this unit on argument writing.


Lesson Seventeen: Hound wrap-up

Summary: Students will learn about the “connective tissue” which makes arguments cohere and practice using linking/transition words. Students will finish their work on Hound by writing an argument paragraph as a formative assessment.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • Recognition of the importance of “connective tissue” in showing the reader how pieces of an argument relate to one another

  • Knowledge of possible words and phrases which serve as transitions in arguments


Directions for teachers:

  1. Assign tonight’s reading homework: “The Pair of Gloves,” by Charles Dickens, which can be found in the text packet. Students should read the text and annotate it, highlighting or circling any difficult words. They should come to class prepared to share any questions about the text and to read it more closely.

  2. Writing lesson: Connective tissue. Explain to students that today we are going to learn how to tie together all the pieces of argumentation we have learned about so far (claims, reasons, evidence, and counterclaims). This lesson will help students accomplish standard W.8.1.c (“Use words, phrases, and clauses to create cohesion and clarify the relationships among claim(s), counterclaims, reasons, and evidence.”).

    1. To begin, ask students to create a basic CREAR in response to the following question: Why does Holmes conceal his early theories from Watson? This time, however, they should write out their CREAR on sentence strips or post-it notes, so that each component is on a different piece of paper. Students should not label the components as claim, reason, etc. Remind students that the best arguments start with collecting evidence. Students should approach the question with open minds, letting the strength of the evidence shape their understandings.

    2. Explain to students that good writers uses words and phrases—what we will call “connective tissue”—to make their arguments cohere, or stick together. Just like our bones and muscles need ligaments and tendons to join together, so to do arguments need connective tissue to flow coherently. To show what you mean, project the following example on a screen:




      • Claim: Holmes doesn’t tell Watson he suspects Stapleton because, deep down, he doesn’t trust his loyal friend.

      • Reason: Holmes distrusts Watson because he knows that his friend is a man of action and, if Watson had reason to suspect Stapleton, would likely try to intimidate the naturalist.

      • Evidence 1: For example, when Watson first learns of Holmes’s suspicion in chapter twelve, he says “why should we not arrest him at once?” Holmes cannot trust Watson to be patient and learn more before acting.

      • Evidence 2: In fact, we know Holmes mistrusts Watson from the start, because when Watson interviews Stapleton and learns about his past running a school, Holmes investigates further and learns that Beryl is actual Stapleton’s wife. He doesn’t tell Watson because he doesn’t trust him to keep this information a secret.

      • Acknowledgement of counterclaim: Other readers might claim that Holmes and Watson are true teammates who trust each other with their lives—after all, in chapter five Holmes says of Watson “there is no man who is better worth having at your side when you are in a tight place.”

      • Response to counterclaim: However, Holmes soon sneaks away to Devonshire to help solve the case, proving that he doesn’t trust Watson to do it by himself.

Explain that the words highlighted in green represent transitions to show how the ideas relate to each other. Ask students what word is used to connect the reason to the claim (“because”). Ask students what words introduce a piece of evidence (“for example,” “in fact”). Explain that the sentences in red font elaborate on the pieces of evidence, showing how they help prove the claim (students will learn more about elaboration in a later lesson). Ask students which word is repeated throughout the argument, showing the writer is focusing on the claim and connecting all ideas back to it (“trust”/“mistrust”).



    1. With help from students, generate a list of words and phrases that can be used to show relationships between ideas. Chart their responses on the wall. Some ideas include: but, because, since, so, however, therefore, for example, in fact, others might claim, others might disagree, etc.)

    2. Instruct students to find a partner and exchange sentence strips or post-it notes. First, students should try (without their partner’s help) to reconstruct the order of their partner’s argument. This will require students to use their knowledge of argument structure to infer which piece is a claim, reason, etc. Students should then check with their partner to verify the order is correct (Teachers should monitor this part and listen for discrepancies in the order which may provide opportunities to reinforce certain concepts. If there are discrepancies it doesn’t necessarily mean that the reader was wrong—it is possible that the writer misunderstands the difference between reasons and evidence and needs to revise her argument). Next, students should provide the connective tissue for their partner’s argument by adding transitions before or after the sentences. Afterwards, students should explain to their partners what they did and why.




  1. Interim assessment #2: Distribute the handout “Interim Assessment #2: The Hound of the Baskervilles Argument Paragraph” located in the resources section at the end of this unit. Students should use all resources at their disposal—book, sleuth journal, notes, wall charts—to complete this writing assignment.

Evaluating student work: While the purpose of this paragraph is largely formative, it can also be combined with the seminar from the previous lesson as a summative assessment for the novel. To score student writing, consider using a Common Core-aligned rubric, like the Tennessee or PARCC writing rubrics. (Note that this paragraph will not include certain components of full essays such as introduction, conclusion, and organization of paragraph structure, so rubrics may need to be modified accordingly. The assessed standards are listed below the paragraph prompt). Most importantly, teachers should study student work to identify areas of strength as well as gaps requiring further instruction. Writing only a paragraph allows students and teachers to focus on the key writing skill of this unit—argumentation—in isolation of other potentially confounding factors, such as essay structure. Teachers can provide additional mini-lessons in argument writing as needed to support students for success on the culminating writing assessment.



Lesson Eighteen: “The Pair of Gloves”

Summary: Students will discuss “The Pair of Gloves,” focusing on the character of Wield and Dickens’s themes. Students will compare and contrast the three fictional detectives we have studied to compare their methods and the causes of their relative success.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • An understanding of the story’s key characters, events, ideas, themes, and vocabulary terms


Directions for teachers:

  1. Summary writing: Instruct students to summarize “The Pair of Gloves” by Charles Dickens. Have students share their summaries with a partner, compare notes, and revise as needed for accuracy. (Note that while the main objective for the sleuth journal is complete, students may find it helpful to continue using these journals for the note-taking and quick writes throughout the remainder of the unit so that their ideas about the texts are gathered in a single place. They will be able to use these notes for the culminating assessment.)

  2. Whole class discussion: Lead a discussion of the story using the following text-dependent questions.




Question

Possible responses

How would you describe Wield’s style as a detective? How is it similar and different than Holmes’s style?

Wield competently follows up on clues, tracing the provenance of the gloves back to the glove cleaner and the owner. Like Holmes, he makes inferences based on clues (the smell of the gloves tips him off that they have been cleaned), but his inferences are not nearly as detailed or important as Holmes’s. One can imagine Holmes looking much more closely at the gloves and making inferences about the owner, not merely the glove itself. Wield also likes to have a good time and takes leisurely breaks from his investigation to offer drinks to his informants, something that the much more business-like Holmes would never do.

What theme does Dickens introduce with the plot twist at the end?

The revelation that Mr. Trinkle actually had no connection to the crime shows that detectives make mistakes, supposed clues can be misleading, and investigations can run in humorous circles. (Note the irony that the lighthearted tone masks the real tragedy of the crime and the fact that no killer is brought to justice).

Why does Dickens leave the crime unsolved? What point might he be making about the inferences that detectives must make?

Dickens does not tell us who the murderer is, which could imply that either Wield never finds out or that the answer isn’t important to the story. Dickens does not want us to focus on the crime; rather, he wants us to see what happens when a detective makes a false inference (that the owner of the gloves must be guilty or at least connected to the murder). Wield did everything as he should have done—it is a detective’s duty to follow up on clues—but ended up right back where he started, with no leads. We see that the act of detection is not nearly as cut-and-dry as it often seems as depicted in popular culture.

What is the danger of making false inferences? In what way was Mr. Trinkle lucky, and what could have happened to him?

In this case the result is merely a humorous misunderstanding. But Trinkle could have easily been arrested or gone to trial had his alibi not checked out or even if the police simply felt he was still suspicious. False accusations can ruin lives, even if the man charged with a crime is ultimately exonerated. Detectives and law enforcement officials in general have an enormous burden of responsibility in making responsible allegations based on their inferences.




  1. Character analysis: To follow up on the first discussion question above and establish connections to Hound, students will analyze the three fictional detectives we have encountered so far (Holmes, Watson, and Wield [Although Watson is not technically a detective by trade, in practicality he moonlights as one in the novel]) by comparing their personalities, methods, and relative success at their craft. Divide students into small groups and give each group a piece of chart paper. Students should create charts which compare and contrast the three detectives. Provide students with the following template to copy:




Detective:

Watson

Holmes

Wield

Personality characteristics










Favorite detection methods










Success as a detective









After the groups complete their charts, post them on the wall and have students do a gallery walk, using post-it notes to write comments on their classmates’ charts which add to or challenge the analysis.




  1. Written character analysis: Ask students to respond to the following prompt with a quick write:


Which of the three detectives is most successful at his job and why? What makes the others less successful?
After writing, engage the students in a whole-class discussion of the prompt, using the charts and their quick writes to make arguments. (Note that most readers will easily come to the conclusion that Holmes is the superior detective; the arguments will be about why. Is it because he is more serious than Wield, and less impulsive than Watson? Is Holmes simply smarter than the two? Is he better at making inferences? Or does he only apply himself more?)


  1. Prepare students for the next lesson:

    1. Assign tonight’s reading homework: Text #1: “Social Media Sites Look to Help in Boston Marathon Bombing Investigation” (from PRI’s The World) and Text #2: “Social Media Vigilantes Cloud Boston Bombing Investigation” (from NPR’s All Things Considered). Both texts can be found in the text packet. Students should read the texts and annotate them, highlighting or circling any difficult words. They should come to class prepared to share any questions about the texts and to read them more closely.

    2. To prepare students for the next lesson, which features articles about the Boston Marathon bombing, ask students what they know or remember about the bombing. Students will likely have heard of the event but may not recall the details. To provide helpful background for tonight’s reading and discussion of these articles in the next lesson, teachers might choose to read aloud to students the article “FBI Appeals for Help in Cracking Boston Marathon Bombing Case,” from UPINewsTrack (The article can be found by clicking the direct link or going to the Tennessee Electronic Library and searching for the title). This article provides a brief overview of the bombing and the key pieces of evidence in the early investigation. It also introduces the FBI’s role in seeking help from the public in the investigation, which helped trigger the social media crowdsourced investigation phenomenon discussed in the two homework articles.


Tier II/Academic Vocabulary from “The Pair of Gloves”:





These words require less time to learn

(They are concrete, describe an object/event/process/characteristic that is familiar to students, or contain familiar word parts)



These words require more time to learn

(They are abstract, have multiple meanings, are a part of a word family, or are likely to appear again in future texts)



Meaning can be learned from context


Distinct

Companionable

Custody

Beckon


Aforesaid

Inquiry


Inquire

Vexed


Oath


Meaning needs to be provided

Magistrate

Parlour


Upholsterer

Haberdasher



Promiscuous


Lesson Nineteen: Discuss Informational Texts about Crowdsourced Investigations

Summary: Students will learn about analyzing point of view in informational texts. Students will discuss and engage in a close reading of an article about crowdsourced investigation and the Boston bombing, focusing on point of view.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • The ability to analyze point of view in informational articles

  • Emerging ability to analyze how writers convey conflicting points of view within a single piece

  • An understanding of the article’s key events, central ideas, points of view, arguments, and vocabulary terms


Directions for teachers:

  1. Mini-lesson on point of view: Explain to students that now our unit focus will move from literary to informational text. These texts are connected to our study of detective literature, and we will discuss that connection later on. For now, though, we are going to focus on skills for comprehending complex informational text, with a special focus on point of view (RI.8.6: Determine an author’s point of view or purpose in a text and analyze how the author acknowledges and responds to conflicting evidence or viewpoints.). Students are probably already familiar with this concept from previous units and grades, so the following mini-lesson provides a quick refresher and advances students toward a more nuanced sense of how authors develop a point of view in informational texts.

    1. Ask students to share their thoughts on what they think “point of view” means. Note that many will focus on the traditional literary definition of point of view, which focuses on the mode of narration or vantage-point from which a story is told (i.e. first person point of view, third person, etc.). Help students understand that in the CCSS RI standards, point of view is used slightly differently: to refer to the author’s viewpoint on the topic or ideas he or she is expressing, including any potential biases or beliefs that influence the way the author views those ideas. (Note that this is not such a radical departure from the literary definition; The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms defines point of view as “The position or vantage-point from which the events of a story seem to be observed and presented to us.” Thus, while in pieces of literature we might often focus on the voice of the narrator and how it shapes our perceptions of events, so too in informational text we focus on the voice of the author and how that author’s perspective shapes our perceptions of ideas. The best way to get a sense of how the author does so is to examine language and diction—phrases and words will often grant insight into the way an author presents information and any potential “spin” that reveals the author’s perspective, attitude, perception, or bias. The following activities will help students understand this somewhat new conception of point of view.)

    2. Display the following paragraph on a screen or duplicate it for students to annotate (it is taken from “Social Media Vigilantes Cloud Boston Bombing Investigation,” the second article students read for homework):

The events last week in Boston played out live on television, on the Internet and all over social media. In online chat forums, such as Reddit and 4Chan, would-be sleuths poured over photos of the bombing site, attempting to identify suspects. Again and again, these Internet rumors found their way into mainstream media.

On Thursday, the New York Post ran a front page photo of two individuals with the headline, Bag Men. And a missing student from Brown University was even named online as a suspect. Both these reports were inaccurate and all of them took root on the Internet.

Explain to students that these are the words of a reporter describing events after the bombings of the Boston Marathon, and we will use these words to understand how the reporter feels about crowdsourced investigation by analyzing what those words reveal (This would be a good time to introduce the concept of connotation, in which we focus not on the word’s literal dictionary definition, or denotation, but on the associations the word evokes.). Model for students the mental process you would use to analyze the reporter’s point of view in the first paragraph by verbalizing your thoughts and annotating as you go along (or asking students to annotate based on what you notice). For instance, you might highlight a word like “would-be” and point out that this term sounds skeptical, making it seem like these citizen investigators are amateurs and not as capable as professional detectives. The word “rumor” shows that the reporter wants us to doubt the quality of the inferences these amateur investigators make.



    1. After modeling the process, ask students to point out what words or phrases in the second paragraph tip us off toward the reporter’s point of view. (Students might notice that the word “inaccurate” is a clear and categorical statement of fact, but also shows that the reporter wants to debunk any rumors. More perceptive students might notice the metaphor “take root,” which makes us think of weeds or other fast-growing, unwanted plants, suggesting that the rumors grow uncontrollably on the Internet and, like roots, are hard to “weed out” or eradicate.)

    2. Explain to students that they will now conduct a close reading in which they will practice their point of view analysis skills as well as many other reading comprehension skills (vocabulary, argument, etc.).

  1. Analysis and close reading of Text #1 (“Social Media Sites Look to Help in Boston Marathon Bombing Investigation,” from PRI’s The World):

    1. Quick write: Ask students to list what they consider the 2-3 central ideas of the article. Have them share their central ideas with a partner. Students should prompt each other to revise their thinking as needed to come to a refined understanding of the central ideas of the article.

    2. Ask students to skim over the article and circle words or phrases that might reveal a speaker’s point of view (since the article is an interview, there are multiple “authors” or speakers). This can be done with a partner as well. The students should focus on words that are strong or that show emotion, including any metaphors or analogies. During this time, the teacher should circulate and give students feedback on the types of words they choose.

    3. As a whole class, have students share the words/phrases they circled.

    4. Conduct a close reading of the article. (Notice that the question sequence below deliberately focuses on building students toward an understanding of point of view through analysis of the details and words the speakers choose. If students still struggle with analyzing point of view, continue to model for them by providing examples, or prompt their thinking with some advancing questions, such as “What mood might someone who includes this detail be in? How does that word make you feel? What synonyms are there for these words, and what does this particular form of the word imply that those synonyms do not?”)

Note: Struggling readers may benefit from hearing the original recording of the interview, which can be found at: http://www.pri.org/stories/2013-04-18/social-media-sites-look-help-boston-marathon-bombing-investigation



Close reading activity for text #1: “Social Media Sites Look to Help in Boston Marathon Bombing Investigation” (from PRI’s The World)”

Close reading excerpt

Sample teacher dialogue and text-dependent questions

Investigators are still sifting through thousands of videos and pictures, both amateur and professional, taken at or around the time of the bombing at the Boston Marathon on Monday.

So too are users of websites such as 4chan and Reddit. The social media sites are crowdsourcing the Boston investigation by asking users to post and analyze photos on their own, and then turn that information over to the FBI.

Some aren’t too happy with this, likening the effect to vigilantism, or a witch hunt, that may be implicating innocent people.

We speak with Alfred Hermida, a professor of journalism at the University of British Columbia.
Aaron Schachter: I’m Aaron Schachter and this is The World, a coproduction of the BBC World Service, PRI and WGBH in Boston. The investigation into the Boston Marathon is proceeding. In the words of Homeland Security Director, Janet Napolitano, apace. Investigators are sifting through thousands of videos and pictures taken by professionals and amateurs alike at the crime scene, but some websites are also getting involved. Sites like 4chan and Reddit are asking users to pour over pictures and video of the bombings to try and help with the investigation. To get more on this, I spoke with Alfred Hermida, and associate professor at the University of British Columbia’s graduate school of journalism. I asked him first to tell me a bit more about sites like Reddit and 4chan.

Alfred Hermida: Think of it like online collectives of people who are usually very tech savvy. Quite often they tend to be male. They are usually younger, and they have an interest in all sorts of things that are going on. But what we’ve seen recently is places like 4chan, like Reddit, or even the anonymous collective taking on issues of social justice, that they see things that are happening that they feel frustrated either at the official response or that they feel they can help, and they start interceding.

Schachter: I took a look at the Reddit channel. They’re calling themselves now the RBI, the Reddit Bureau of Investigation. And it’s kind of a funny, quirky name, but some are really concerned because if you look at their page, there are a whole lot of pictures of people with backpacks circled. It creates suspects out of people who were just watching the race.

Hermida: It really depends on how you view this. When you look at something like Reddit, what’s happening is a conversation, a discussion. It’s like being a fly on the wall in the newsroom or in a police office, and you’re listening to that discussion. So look at it less like they’re publishing information and more like they’re discussing information. They’re saying I’ve seen this picture, what do you make of it? And collaboratively working together trying to identify what’s going on and figure out what’s happening there. They’re trying to provide information for the FBI.

Schachter: That sounds helpful. It sounds benign, and yet pictures that these groups have put together were on the cover of the New York Post, or at least the online version of the New York Post. Certainly seems like it may have made suspects out of a couple of guys.

Hermida: Well then, think about who’d made the decision to post it on a mainstream media outlet. What happens is that picture is then taken out of context. What’s happening there is that somebody may post a picture, saying, ‘what do you make of this?’ And asking the collective to bring their brains together and saying, ‘let’s sort of figure out what’s going on here.’ The problem becomes is when you take that image out of context and you then publish it saying Reddit says this is a suspect. That’s not what the Reddit users are saying. What they’re saying is ‘we’re trying to help in whatever way we can,’ and part of what I was noticing on the conversation of Reddit was a backlash against mainstream media for taking some of their discussions and taking it out of context, and misrepresenting what they were trying to do.

Schachter: And how about people who might try to do that on the sites themselves?

Hermida: This is what’s really interesting when you look at these discussion, is when somebody tries to do that and, say, engage in, say, racial profiling or try to make allegations for which there’s very little evidence, there’s a real backlash from the community and often quite a vicious one. What tends to happen is you get this very self-correcting mechanism taking place when others jump in and tell that person to shut up, tell them not to spread this information.

Schachter: I wonder, professor, if there’s any indication that what these sites are trying to do actually works and if perhaps officials, the FBI, and others are tapping into them.

Hermida: I think it’s very hard to know at this stage. This is all very, very new and I think the initial reactions from authorities is to be rather suspicious of this kind of activity. After all, we’re used to a world where police investigate, and we watch from the outside and expect them to tell us what are the results of that investigation. But much like what’s happening in journalism, what’s happening in other disciplines where individuals can take on some of those roles, we’re seeing here individuals who are very tech savvy, who might have the digital forensic skills that are highly needed for this kind of investigation. But they’re coming together and saying we have something to contribute. So the big issue really is, how do you channel that? And in some ways the authorities don’t have a way of channeling the discussions happening on Reddit, don’t have a way of channeling the expertise of some of these people who might be able to actually help with identifying what’s happening in some pictures, help the police deal with the mass of information.

Schachter: Alfred Hermida teaches journalism at the University of British Columbia. Thank you.

Hermida: My pleasure


What is “crowdsourcing”? Why is social media a good forum for crowdsourced investigations?


What is “vigilantism” and how is it like a “witch-hunt”? What does it mean to implicate innocent people? Whose point of view is expressed when calling these events a “witch-hunt”? What is the relationship between these three ideas—“crowdsourcing,” “vigilantism,” and “implicating innocent people”? How does one lead to the other?

What can we infer about the users of Reddit and 4chan from Hermida’s description? What is a “collective” and what does it mean to be “tech savvy”? What are the values of these users (think about the term “social justice”) and what do they hope to accomplish by interceding in investigations?

What is Shachter’s point of view toward crowdsourcing? Which of his words and phrases tip you off toward his point of view? What is Hermida’s view toward crowdsourcing? Which of his words and phrases tip you off toward his point of view?

What argument does Hermida make about Reddit and 4chan? According to him, who is responsible for spreading false rumors and why? Why did Reddit users “backlash against mainstream media”?


Based on the context, what is an “allegation,” and how strong is an argument based on allegation (as compared to an argument based on inference)?

What claim does Hermida make about crowdsourced investigation? What reasons and evidence does he use to back up his claim? Is his argument supported by the evidence?




Lesson Twenty: Continue Discussing Informational Texts about Crowdsourced Investigations

Summary: Students will discuss and engage in a close reading of a second article about crowdsourced investigation and the Boston bombing, focusing on point of view. Students will compare the two articles.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • Ability to analyze how writers convey conflicting points of view within a single piece

  • An understanding of the article’s key events, central ideas, points of view, arguments, and vocabulary terms




  1. Analysis and close reading of text #2 (“Social Media Vigilantes Cloud Boston Bombing Investigation,” from NPR’s All Things Considered).

    1. Quick write: Ask students to list what they consider the 2-3 central ideas of the article. Have them share their central ideas with a partner. Students should prompt each other to revise their thinking as needed to come to a refined understanding of the central ideas of the article.

    2. Ask students to skim over the article and circle words or phrases that might reveal a speaker’s point of view (since the article is an interview, there are multiple “authors” or speakers). This time, students should try to do this independently.

    3. As a whole class, have students share the words/phrases they circled.

    4. Conduct a close reading of the article. Since students now have experience reading closely for point of view, consider having them take ownership of this close read by leading the discussion or crafting their own questions.

Note: Struggling readers may benefit from hearing the original recording of the interview, which can be found at:

http://www.npr.org/2013/04/22/178462380/social-media-vigilantes-cloud-boston-bombing-investigation


  1. Whole class discussion: Discuss both Boston Marathon bombing articles using the following questions. Consider asking students to quick write responses and share with a partner before sharing with the whole class.

    1. What connections do you notice between the two articles? What events or ideas in article one may have caused events in article two?

    2. Where do the texts disagree or provide conflicting information about crowdsourcing? Where do the points of view differ or conflict? Of the two articles, whose point of view is most strongly supported by evidence, and why?

    3. Based on the ideas, evidence, and points of view expressed in the two articles, what is your current point of view about crowdsourced investigation?


Close reading activity for text #2: “Social Media Vigilantes Cloud Boston Bombing Investigation” (from NPR’s All Things Considered)

Close reading excerpt

Sample teacher dialogue and text-dependent questions

CORNISH: The events last week in Boston played out live on television, on the Internet and all over social media. In online chat forums, such as Reddit and 4chan, would-be sleuths pored over photos of the bombing site, attempting to identify suspects. Again and again, these Internet rumors found their way into mainstream media.

On Thursday, the New York Post ran a front page photo of two individuals with the headline, Bag Men. And a missing student from Brown University was even named online as a suspect. Both these reports were inaccurate and all of them took root on the Internet. Joining us now to talk about how so many people got so much wrong is NPR’s technology correspondent Steve Henn. And Steve, first, for folks who don’t know, what are Reddit and 4chan?

HENN: Well, 4chan and Reddit are social media sites that let users post content more or less anonymously. And early last week on both of these sites and some others, people began discussion groups dedicated to finding the Boston bombers. I spoke with Alex Madrigal. He covers technology and social media at The Atlantic. And he started watching this from the beginning.

MADRIGAL: People decided that they could help with the investigation by taking all the photos that had come out of the bombing, combing through them and looking for—I’m sort of air-quoting here—“suspicious” characters, people carrying backpacks, people who might look like terrorists.

HENN: At the time, Madrigal compared this to online vigilantism.

CORNISH: But what did these online discussions look like?

HENN: Well, one of the most popular appeared on 4chan and it was a collection of photographs with, you know, these, quote/unquote, “suspects” circled. In some cases, notes were scrolled next to the photos explaining the reason why the person circled was allegedly suspicious. And some of the reasons in the posts were that the person was, quote, “brown.” In the end, none of the people who were circled in this post turned out to be at all related to the bombing.

But that individual post attracted more than 2.5 million hits by late afternoon Wednesday last week. And it’s clear some of these forums affected both the investigation and the media’s coverage of it. On Thursday morning, the New York Post ran the front-page headline you mentioned, Bag Men. And it included a large color photographs [sic] of two high school athletes who were featured in one of the 4chan photos.

The Post later said they’d been given that photo by law enforcement.

CORNISH: All right, Steve, but how did all this online sleuthing actually affect the investigation?

HENN: Well, over the weekend, investigators in Boston said one of the reasons they decided to publicly release images of their suspects Thursday evening was to try and tamp down on the Internet rumors and this kind of speculation, which by late last week had become a distraction. Unfortunately, shortly after the FBI’s press conference, folks on Reddit began speculating that one of the suspects looked like Sunil Tripathi, a 22-year-old student at Brown University who’s been missing since mid-March.

That rumor began to spread online. And in the middle of the night, several people on Twitter tweeted out that Sunil’s name had been broadcast on a police scanner and he had been named as a suspect. There’s no evidence that happened, but starting about three in the morning, Tripathi’s family was besieged by media requests. Reporters were calling both his sister and his parents, increasingly confident that their missing son was somehow involved.

Major websites printed Tripathi’s name as a suspect. And again, these accusations were completely wrong, but this was obviously a horrendous experience for a family that was already going through a very, very difficult time.

CORNISH: All right, Steve, now that it seems pretty clear that the prime suspect is in custody, do you see any contrition online?

HENN: Yes, actually. Immediately after the suspects’ names were released by police in Boston, individuals who had participated on Twitter and on Reddit in naming Sunil Tripathi reached out to the family and apologized. And just this afternoon, the general manager of Reddit, Eric Martin, apologized publicly to the family, saying that he regretted the pain that they had to endure. And he expressed hope that the entire community would learn from this experience, and he promised to do a better job policing Reddit’s own rules in the future.

And even last week, during the events unfolding in Boston, there were those on Reddit and in some of these other forums that were warning some of the participants that what they were doing could seriously injure innocent people and that they needed to be more careful. Obviously, those warnings weren’t heeded at the time.

CORNISH: NPR’s technology correspondent Steve Henn. Steve, thank you.

HENN: You’re welcome.



What are “would-be sleuths”? What does this term reveal about Cornish’s point of view toward crowdsourced investigation?
According to Cornish, what is the relationship between the crowdsourced investigation discussed in article #1 and the false accusation of the “Bag Men”?
What does Madrgial’s tone and word choice reveal about his point of view and attitude toward crowdsourced investigation?
This paragraph describes an act of “racial profiling,” in which people are targeted or suspected because of how they look. How did 4Chan users engage in racial profiling? What is Henn’s point of view toward racial profiling, and how can you tell?

What does it mean to be besieged (what word parts can you identify)? Why was Tripathi’s family besieged?

What claim does Henn make about the effects of crowdsourcing? What reasons and evidence does he use to support his claim?

What is contrition? Based on the evidence he provides, does Henn support his argument that “there has been some” contrition?



What point of view does Eric Martin take toward Reddit? Based on what the article tells about him, What biases might Martin have?



Lesson Twenty-One: Continue Discussing Informational Texts about Crowdsourced Investigations

Summary: Students will take an interim formative assessment on a new text about crowdsourced investigations. Students will analyze the connections between the texts they have read in this unit so far and make arguments based on their analyses.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • An understanding of the article’s central ideas, point of view, and arguments


Directions for teachers:


  1. Interim Assessment #3: Give students the third interim assessment, in which they will read a new article (“Is There Such a Thing as Too Much Evidence?”) and respond to constructed-response prompts. Students should take the assessment individually before any discussion of the article. In the Unit Resources section you can find a “teacher version” of the assessment, which includes the aligned standards and notes on possible student responses, followed by a clean “student version” which includes the article and the activities (the article is not included in the text packet because students should be seeing it “fresh” for the first time when they take this assessment). After analyzing the results, teachers can identify skill gaps (based on the standards aligned to the questions students most commonly missed) and work with the whole class, small groups, or individuals to reinforce or re-teach certain skills over the next few lessons on informational text.

  2. Comparison across texts:

    1. Explain to students that now we will use two of the unit’s essential questions to help us draw connections across the main categories of texts we have studied so far: detective literature and articles about crowdsourced investigations. The two questions are:

  • What are the benefits and drawbacks of inference-making?

  • How has social media changed the way people think about detection, and are these changes for the better?



    1. Divide students into small groups. Each group should pick one of the two questions above to focus on (or the teacher can assign questions to ensure equal coverage of each one). Students should use Hound, “The Pair of Gloves,” and the three articles on the Boston Marathon Bombing to find evidence that may be useful in answering their question (for the second question, students should use the Doyle and Dickens texts as baseline examples against which to compare modern changes to detection). Encourage groups to find at least once piece of evidence from each of the five texts and record it in a list. Remind students that at this point we are only engaging in the first step of the inductive process: simply gathering evidence before we make any logical leaps, connections, or conclusions to answer the question.

    2. Once the groups have gathered their evidence, instruct each group to develop a claim based on the evidence which responds to the essential question. Remind them that the best claims are based on what the evidence leads you to understand (in this case, the totality of the evidence across all five texts), not your instincts or personal opinions.

    3. Engage the class in a whole group discussion of each question in turn. Start by asking groups to share their claims; then ask students to back up their claims with evidence and/or provide counterclaims to refute opposing claims. Occasionally, ask if any students would like to adjust their claims based on their classmates’ reasoning.

  1. Prepare students for the next lesson: Assign tonight’s reading homework: “Sherlock Holmes Can Teach You to Multitask,” by Maria Konnikova. Explain to students that this text examines the psychology behind Sherlock Holmes: how he trains his mind to become the ultimate detecting machine. The article can be found in the text packet. Students should read the text and annotate it, highlighting or circling any difficult words. They should come to class prepared to share any questions about the text and to read it more closely.


Extension activity: Have students prepare for a more formal debate on the two essential questions. Each group should use the claims and evidence they developed in the lesson as the basis of their argument. Groups should prepare by planning out their strategy, including opening and closing statements and rebuttals in response to potential counterclaims. For the debate, the teacher might split the class into two sides on each issue or pair groups to square off against each other based on opposing arguments. The teacher can judge the debates or assign impartial students to judge based on the quality of each side’s reasoning.

Lesson Twenty-Two: Discuss the Article “Sherlock Holmes Can Teach You to Multitask”

Summary: Students will engage in small-group and then whole-group analysis of an article about Sherlock Holmes’s thought processes and modern psychology. Students will analyze the article for argument structure.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • An understanding of the article’s central ideas, point of view, arguments, and key vocabulary terms.

  • A vision of how professional authors craft arguments


Directions for teachers:

  1. Analysis circles

    1. Explain to students that to help us understand the article “Sherlock Holmes Can Teach You to Multitask,” we will tackle parts of it separately. Divide students into five groups. Each group will take one of the analysis tasks below, which includes a topic and some guiding prompts. Students in a group will work together, discussing and annotating the article, and then charting their responses and ideas on a piece of chart paper to share with the whole class. Note that the latter three tasks may be a bit more challenging because they require closer analysis of specific textual details—consider placing at least one strong reader in each of these groups.

  • Analysis group 1: Summary and central idea: Summarize the article, including central ideas and how the author develops them with supporting ideas.

  • Analysis group 2: Structure: How does Konnikova structure her article? What does she do first, second, third, etc.? Why does she organize her article in this way?

  • Analysis group 3: Connections: What connections does Konnikova make between psychological research and Sherlock Holmes? Explain the studies she cites and how she relates them to Holmes’s mental processes.

  • Analysis group 4: Vocabulary. What are the most important words students should know to understand the article? Explain the words in student-friendly terms (use a dictionary if necessary) and analyze their importance to the article.

  • Analysis group 5: Purpose and point of view: What is Konnikova’s purpose in writing this article? What is her point of view towards attention and the Holmesian way of thinking?

    1. During this work time, circulate among the groups, providing questions and prompts as needed to spur students’ thinking or point them toward particular aspects of the text. If a particular group seems stuck, get them started by modeling for them part of your thinking process about the textual analysis problem they are trying to solve without “giving away” a full answer.

    2. Once the groups are finished, they should stick their charts to the wall. Then, each group should pick a representative to share their findings with the whole class (in the order of groups listed above). Students from other groups should add their own understandings or challenges so that the entire class can continuously refine their understanding of the article.

  1. Argument analysis activity: Explain to students that while we have focused on using the CREAR structure to create our own arguments, authors use the same elements, although often in more creative ways. The following activity will guide students in analyzing the structure of Konnikova’s argument, which in turn will help students perceive what successful arguments look like as they prepare to create their own argumentative essays.

    1. Split students into small groups (can be the same groups from the previous activity). Instruct each group to find the sentence that best serves as the claim of the article and underline it. Students should spend several minutes discussing the article and the claim—there are many possible contenders, including some minor claims. Through their discussion they should refine their understanding of the article to decide on the key (most important) argument Konnikova makes.

    2. After students identify the claim, ask each group to share and have the class decide on the sentence that most clearly and strongly expresses Konnikova’s claim.

    3. Instruct the groups to circle the reasons and highlight the evidence that Konnikova uses to back up her claim. Many students will struggle to distinguish claims, reasons, and evidence. Remind them that good evidence is a fact, while reasons and claims are ideas that are debatable. Reasons are ideas the author uses to support and develop the claim.

    4. As a final step, each group should outline Konnikova’s argument on a piece of chart paper. For this outline, they should list the steps (claim, reasons, evidence) in the order Konnikova presents each piece (for instance, some students might locate the claim in the final paragraph, which would then go at the end of their outline). This activity will help make the often abstract concept of argumentation concrete for students by visualizing how a professional author constructs her argument.

    5. Reflect on the outlines as a class. Consider the following prompts for discussion:

      1. Compare the different student versions and discuss the rationale for any discrepancies.

      2. Discuss what makes Konnikova’s argument effective. What choices, in terms of particular components (reasons and evidence) to include as well as organization (order of components) were most effective and why?

      3. As a segue to the next writing lesson, the teacher might point out that Konnikova’s argument is strong because she uses multiple pieces of evidence and reasons. As an experienced writer, her argument structure is looser and more creative (for instance, she doesn’t introduce her argument in the first paragraph, instead beginning with a series of mini-anecdotes to engage the reader and establish the context). When we practice creating our own outlines in the next few days, we will follow a more traditional structure (beginning with claim in thesis position at end of introduction paragraph, etc.), but this activity shows you that argumentation is not a rigid formula and that master writers can manipulate the components to great effect.

  2. Assign homework for next lesson: Tell students to read “Do You Think Like Sherlock Homes,” another article by Maria Konnikova. The article can be found in the unit text packet. Note that this next article expands in greater detail on some of the central ideas of the article that students discussed today. While the second article is longer and more challenging, the first should provide enough of a foundation for them to complete an initial read. Students will still likely struggle with the language demands and challenging ideas of the second article, and that is fine. By previewing the text for homework they can gain familiarity with the article and its main ideas; in class, the teacher will provide scaffolding to help students more fully comprehend the article.

Tier II/Academic Vocabulary from “Sherlock Holmes Can Teach You to Multitask”





These words require less time to learn

(They are concrete, describe an object/event/process/characteristic that is familiar to students, or contain familiar word parts)



These words require more time to learn

(They are abstract, have multiple meanings, are a part of a word family, or are likely to appear again in future texts)



Meaning can be learned from context


Herald

Baseline


Flitting

Multitasking

Counterproductive

Frenzy


Distinguishes

Input


Mindlessness

Effortful



Predilection

Default


Engagement

Mindfully

Deliberately

Superficially

Passively

Mindfulness

Disengagement

Passive


Registers

Processing



Meaning needs to be provided




Uncanny

Stimulus


Warrant

Propensity



Salient


Lesson Twenty-Three: Discuss the Article “Do You Think Like Sherlock Holmes?”

Summary: Students will engage in a close reading of a second article on the psychology of Sherlock Holmes’s approach to detection. Students will learn how to structure their arguments in an essay format.
Objective: Students should leave this lesson with:

  • An understanding of the article’s central ideas, point of view, arguments, and key vocabulary terms.

  • An understanding of how an argument can fit in a full essay structure


Directions for teachers:

  1. Close reading: Lead students in a close reading of the passage included at the end of this lesson.

  2. Argument writing mini-lesson on essay structure: This lesson will prepare students for the upcoming culminating assessment. So far, students have been writing arguments and practicing incorporating the various pieces of their arguments, but they have not yet structured those pieces into a full essay. While students are likely already familiar with the basic structures of an essay, this mini-lesson will help them see how the pieces of an argument fit into that structure:

    1. Ask students to recall the basic components of an argument (CREAR) and to explain why each piece is important.

    2. Explain to students that these components fit very well into what they already know about essays:




      • Claim: This is your thesis statement. It will often go at the end of your introductory paragraph.

      • Reasons: These are your topic sentences. They often start your body paragraphs.

      • Evidence: This makes up the “meat” of your body paragraphs—the support for your topic sentences.

      • Acknowledge of and Response to Counterclaims: This new component will be the hardest to place. There is no set or consistent place for it. Ask students to help you generate some ideas for where to best address the counterclaim if the primary goal is to convince the reader of your argument. Some possibilities include: at the end of each body paragraph, wherever objections might naturally arise, or in a final body paragraph that deals exclusively with counterclaims.




    1. To practice this structure, ask students to respond to the following prompt based on the article they have just discussed. They should find several pieces of evidence from the text, write a claim and 2-4 reasons, and write out a counterclaim.


Should students be encouraged to multi-task in order to save time and get more done?


    1. In pairs, student should exchange their arguments. Then, each student should take his partner’s argument—which is right now just a list—and turn it into an outline for a potential essay. Ask students to be thoughtful about organization: what is the best order to place the reasons in? Where might the most convincing reason go? What about the best placement of evidence? There are many ways to write an outline, but below is a basic template students might use (note counterclaim is left out, because this component can be placed flexibly at many stages—remind students to incorporate it in their outlines). If students struggle to use the template, consider modeling for them how to create an outline using your own response to the prompt.


Download 0.6 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page